University makes available low-cost online college courses
to students statewide who meet enrollment standards, qualify for state
grant
MURFREESBORO — Qualified high school juniors and seniors
statewide will be able to take tuition-free online courses for college credit
through Middle Tennessee State University’s recently expanded dual-enrollment
program.
The move,
announced Tuesday (May 12), follows a new emphasis by the university on its
dual-enrollment outreach, which includes MTSU courses to be taught this fall on
high school campuses in Rutherford, Williamson and Bradley counties.
MTSU’s Dual Enrollment Program
allows Tennessee high school students, who meet the university’s admissions
criteria and gain approvals from their guidance counselors, to take college
classes before they graduate.
“Students receive many benefits,”
said University College Dean Mike Boyle, who oversees the Dual Enrollment
Program. “They may be able
to take classes that are required by their high school, but earn both college
and high school credit at the same time. It also allows them to make an easier
transition to college and can shorten how long it takes to earn their college
degree.”
The online offerings, which range
from courses in Aerospace to Recording Industry, will likely be attractive
options to home-schooled students in search of additional academic enrichment
opportunities, Boyle said.
The greatly reduced costs for the
offerings are possible, Boyle said, because of a recently expanded Tennessee
Dual Enrollment Grant and a decision by the Tennessee Board of Regents to
reduce tuition rates for dual-enrollment students.
The state recently set higher
payouts for the dual enrollment grant, starting with juniors in the 2015-16
school year. Beginning with those students, the grant will pay out $500 for the
first and second dual-enrollment courses, which will cover MTSU’s tuition
charges. They are also eligible for $200 in grant funding for a third course.
Next fall’s seniors, however, are
not eligible for the grant’s higher payouts. But MTSU created a one-year
supplemental scholarship to offset the balance between the $300-per-course
grant and the $500-per-course tuition cost.
Students must pay a $25
admissions application fee to MTSU. And, those taking online courses will be
assessed a fee of $10 per course credit hour. Students must also assume costs
for textbooks and applicable lab fees for science courses.
MTSU’s online opportunities for
dual-enrollment students include:
· Aerospace 1010: Introduction to Aerospace
· Agribusiness and Agriscience 1101: Greenhouse
Management online
· Agribusiness and Agriscience 2130: Ag Business
· Anthropology 2010: Cultural Anthropology
· Anthropology 2210: Introduction to World
Prehistory
· Communications 2300: Interpersonal Communication
· Economics 2410-DE1: Macroeconomics
· Geography 2000: Introduction to Regional
Geography
· Global Studies 2010: Introduction to
Cross-Cultural Experiences
· Music 1030: Introduction to Music
· Political Science 1005: Introduction to American
Politics
· Political Science 1010: Introduction to Global
Politics
· Political Science 2020: State and Local
Government
· Recording Industry 1020: American Media and Social
Institutions
· Sociology 1010: Introductory Sociology
· Sociology 2010: Social Problems
MTSU
President Sidney A. McPhee said the university’s expansion in dual enrollment,
expected to grow from about 35 students this year to 500 in the fall, is an
important investment.
“The governor's Drive to 55 identifies earlier
engagement by students as a key advantage for helping grow the state's levels
of educational attainment,” McPhee said. “TBR feels, and we concur, that high
schools and students should have a variety of options for dual enrollment,
which why they established an attractive tuition rate for its universities to
offer such courses.
“We at MTSU also value the chance to establish ties
sooner with students who have identified attending a four-year institution
as their higher educational goal.”
Students
and parents can learn more by visiting www.mtsu.edu/dualenrollment or contacting Mona
Snell, MTSU’s dual enrollment advisor, at 615-898-5251 or mona.snell@mtsu.edu.
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